HTA - lecture 8 - HTA and policy making Flashcards

1
Q

policy goal in health care

A

ensuring affordable and equitable access for (all) patients to effective therapies in a sustainable manner

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2
Q

HTA definition

A

“A multidisciplinary process that uses explicit methods to determine the value of a health technology at different points in it’s lifecycle.
The purpose is to inform decision-making in order to promote an equitable, efficient, and high-quality health system.”

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3
Q

reimbursement, based on what criteria?

A
  • Disease burden: what patients and society think of it
    o End of life drugs can costs the most
  • Budget impact
    o Costs to the drug (and additional costs)
    o Number of patients
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4
Q

revealed preferences

A

looking at what people actually do, rather than what they say they prefer or intend to do

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5
Q

stated preferences

A

refer to what people express or say about their preferences when it comes to healthcare treatments or interventions.

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6
Q

provisional conclusion criteria

A
  • Disease severity, cost-effectiveness, health gain crucial
  • Budget impact relevant, esp. at 50 million euros and more
  • Productivity gain not important (societal perspective?)

Preference building process part utilistic (more health, at lower costs, part egalitarian (disease severity prominent))
 the priority view: benefits to worse off count for more, in terms of overall utility, than comparable benefits to better off

Conclusions in line with research abroad.

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7
Q

market access

A

Research and development  European medicines agency (EMA)  European commission  registration in EU  reimbursement

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8
Q

policy dilemma in drug reimbursement

A

New expensive drug, probably effective, hardly cost-effective
(limited evidence from RCT drug vs placebo, short FU etc. )

Reimburse at proposed monopoly price?
+ fast access, maybe health gain for those in need
- Risk of no/limited health gain, waste of money

No reimbursement?
+ no risk of inefficient spending
- Missed opportunity of health gain

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9
Q

uncertainty in policy making

A
  • DCE -> uncertainty relevant for policymakers.
  • Clinical uncertainty:
    o Effectiveness (endpoints vs surrogate outcomes)
    o Safety (number/seriousness adverse events): we know a lot about short term but nota bout long term
    o Quality of life
  • Cost-effectiveness (CE in USA -> CE abroad?)
  • Budget impact (no of patients, price per patient)
  • Technical uncertainty (model disease & treatment)
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10
Q

uncertainty: no cure no pay. pro’s and con’s

A
  • Advantages:
    o “no cure, no pay” => value for money
    o application on best patient sub groups
    o after contract new decision possible
  • Disadvantages:
    o transaction costs contract
    o clear outcome indicator crucial
    o cost of monitoring/registration
    o Budget impact may be very high
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